Seventh Grader Suspended For Twirling Pencil ‘Like A Gun’

A 13-year-old boy in Vernon, New Jersey was suspended from school
last week after being accused of holding his pencil like a gun.

Ethan Chaplin, a seventh-grade student at Glen Meadow Middle School,
was twirling his pencil in math class when a fellow student suddenly
yelled out, “He’s making gun motions, send him to juvie!”Ethan was immediately taken to the principal’s office, suspended, and
told he would not be able to return to school until he passed a
psychological evaluation.“I was shocked because I’m like, how am I not going to come back to school? I didn’t even do anything,” Ethan told News 12.Despite telling school administrators that his classmate had been
bullying him and was simply attempting to get him in trouble, Ethan says
his comments were completely ignored. When questioned, Vernon Schools Superintendent Charles Maranzano
stood by the principal’s decision, insinuating that Ethan could be
plotting a violent attack against his school.“We never know what’s percolating in the minds of children,”
Maranzano said. “And when they demonstrate behaviors that raise red
flags, we must do our duty.”Michael Chaplin, Ethan’s father, was just as shocked by the school’s handling of the situation.“I’m absolutely livid,” Michael said. “I think it’s gross misconduct
at its finest. They took something so minimal and took it so far over
the edge.”Speaking with Infowars, Michael detailed his son’s horrific
experience during the five-hour long physical and psychological
evaluation. “The child was stripped, had to give blood samples (which caused him
to pass out) and urine samples for of all things drug testing,” Michael
said. “Then four hours later a social worker spoke to him for five
minutes and cleared him. Then an actual doctor came in and said the
state was 100 percent incorrect in their procedure and this would not
get him back in school.”According to Michael, the school has since scheduled a meeting regarding his son’s return for Monday morning.Ethan’s story is yet another example of innocent children being
targeted for completely mundane behavior. In multiple cases, young
students have been suspended for simply having items that resemble the
shape of a firearm.A 7-year-old child from Maryland was suspended last year for allegedly chewing a “Pop Tart” breakfast pastry into the shape of a handgun.A 6-year-old Massachusetts boy was given detention and forced to
write an apology letter to fellow students last year after bringing a plastic Lego gun, the size of a quarter, onto his school bus.Just last month, a fifth-grade student from Ohio was suspended for three days after shaping his fingers like a gun. The child was accused of brandishing a “level 2 lookalike firearm” by the school’s principal.